You’ve probably had writing teachers warn you not to plagiarize. You can get in trouble for plagiarism. Don’t do it!
You’ve probably had writing teachers warn you not to plagiarize. You can get in trouble for plagiarism. Don’t do it!
Ok, it sounds bad, but… what is plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using someone else’s words or work and submitting them as your own. To plagiarize is to take credit for someone else’s work. Think of plagiarism as stealing someone’s work, and then lying about it.
That sounds pretty bad, doesn’t it?
Imagine that you wrote an awesome paper for a psych class. Your cousin comes over one day, sees a print-out of your paper on your desk, and remembers her own psych assignment is due in a couple of days. She makes a copy of your paper, then submits it to her psych professor. She gets an A!
How would you feel when you found out what she did? You worked on that paper for days. You brainstormed and made an outline. You wrote your draft then revised it three times before you decided it was ready to submit.
Your cousin saw it, skimmed it, thought it was good enough for her own class, then just copied it. And she got an A for that.
That is plagiarism.
Someone does all this work, coming up with a good idea, developing it into an essay or a speech or a video. Then someone else comes along and just makes a copy of it. Or, they just copy a part of it. That is stealing someone’s work. And if they then turn it in, the professor assumes it’s their work. That is lying about it.
In the United States (as well as other countries, but this guide focuses on the US), your original ideas that you put into words, speech, images, graphs, or video are considered your intellectual property. You are the owner. You came up with the ideas, you made something of them, you own them.
This concept of your words as “intellectual property” is not a global concept. Not every country sees you as the “owner” of ideas that you’ve put into words arranged in a particular order. Some countries place more importance on cooperation when learning or writing. Instead of seeing copying as “cheating”, they might see it as “sharing”. In the US, that is considered plagiarizing.
Other countries feel that knowledge is passed down from the wise masters, so as a student, can what you contribute be better than what a wise master said one hundred years ago? Better to use the wise master’s own words. In the US, that is also considered plagiarizing.
Not every place emphasizes the importance of doing your own work. Maybe no one teaches what plagiarism is. Maybe students have never heard of it. Then, they go to university, and suddenly they get an F on a paper with the word PLAGIARIZED in big red letters! Whether a student did it on purpose or not, in the US, that is still considered plagiarizing.
However…
You can avoid plagiarism by giving credit to the original writer/owner of the work. That is called citing your source.
American academics – professors, researchers, writers – see learning and knowledge as a long, ongoing conversation. Students learn from people who came before them, but they have the opportunity to add their own ideas and their own words to the conversation.
For example:
Let’s say you’re in a literature class and you’re learning about Maya Angelou and her memoirs. You are assigned a research paper and you decide to write about how Maya Angelou’s memoirs talk about race.
First of all, where did the idea for your paper come from? If you went to Wikipedia, you might have seen that idea there. It caught your eye and you thought it would be an interesting topic. Would you be the first person ever to write about Maya Angelou’s memoirs and how they depict race?
Absolutely not.
But you would read different writers’ opinions about your topic – that is the research part of your work. Then based on what you read, you would decide what angle you want to approach the topic from. Then, you would come up with your own ideas, inspired by what others have written.
If you consider what other writers have written about your topic as a conversation, you will see that, throughout the years, different writers have contributed different ideas, different interpretations, different insights. Some writers agreed with each other, while others disagreed with everyone. That is how an academic conversation is made.
Then, when you add your own ideas, interpretations, and insights – when you agree or disagree with various writers – you are adding to that long, ongoing conversation.
However, if you instead plagiarized your work and ideas, you would be joining that conversation under false pretenses. If you steal someone else’s work, then you basically are not adding your voice at all.
Plagiarism doesn’t mean you have to come up with 100% original ideas. Some might argue that’s not even possible. However, if you use someone else’s words, you need to give them credit. That’s what it means to cite your source.
What is plagiarism? Now that you know it means taking credit for someone else’s work, let’s see what that actually looks like:
This is very important: plagiarism is an offense, whether you did it on purpose or not; whether you knew about it or not; whether you’re a student or a professional.
There are consequences to committing this offense.
In the professional realm, plagiarism is even more serious. Academics, journalists, writers, or anyone else who plagiarizes can damage their career. Since plagiarizing is stealing someone’s work then lying about it, what would you think of a journalist who is found guilty of plagiarizing? You wouldn’t believe them anymore, would you? You would doubt their honesty and integrity. Why read anything they wrote if you can longer trust that they wrote it?
This is the seriousness of plagiarizing.
There is one way to take advantage of the entire collection of human knowledge for your purposes, without plagiarizing:
Cite your sources.
This means you give credit to the person who originally wrote the words or did the work.
Remember that plagiarism includes spoken language, images, graphs, and videos – not just written words. If you heard an amazing TED Talk and you want to include some information in your research paper, you must cite the source.
Why is this important?
First of all, it shows your audience that you did research. It proves you’re not just making things up or rambling off the top of your head. It gives legitimacy and validity to your work. You want to be taken seriously, right? Show that you did your research.
Another reason to cite your sources is to show your audience where your information came from. You want your research to be from credible sources. Nowadays with so much information available at your fingertips (literally! Hello Google!), you want to make sure you find information that is real and proven and comes from people who know what they’re talking about.
For example: Let’s say you’re looking for information about climate change. Would you trust an article that was written in the National Enquirer? What about from a website called NewsBuzzDaily? Part of your research is to make sure your sources are reliable and valid.
A third reason to cite your sources is so your readers can check the sources if there are any questions. Sometimes, a reader might not understand what you meant with a paraphrase. They can go to the original source and find where you got the information. They can read the original information for themselves.
The last reason to cite your source is so your readers can know where to go if they want additional information about your topic. Some readers just want to dig deeper and citing your source will point them in the direction of more information.
HAMNIC Solutions is here to support your graduate journey. Our professional writing and editing expertise helps you manage your academic workload, reduce stress, and focus on well-being for a balanced academic and personal life. Visit HAMNIC Solutions to learn how we can make your student life easier and healthier, enabling you to achieve your academic ambitions without sacrificing a balanced lifestyle.